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Maan
News Agency
The Palestinian Circus was started by a man named Shadi
Zmorrod and seeks to enlighten people about Palestinian
suffering, whilst also entertaining the Palestinian people.
When I contacted Shadi to learn more about his creation, he
insisted that I come and experience life with the circus
first-hand. The day I arrived, Shadi had just secured
funding from the French Consulate, which had enabled him to
hire a room in which the circus' performers could practice.
Previously, the circus had been forced to make-do with
limited resources; they practiced in the street, used toilet
brushes as juggling batons and relied on the generosity of
local restaurants to feed the performers. The funding will
also facilitate a tour of Europe for the Palestinian circus
students. As Shadi announced the news to his students he was
met with cheers and joyous bursts of laughter.
Children will be children
Shadi explained his motives for setting up the Palestinian
circus school. He said that his goal was to, "redraw the
smiles on the faces of the children." Children are born
every day into an oppressive, conflictual situation and
Shadi is here to enable them, despite their surroundings, to
just be children. Shadi described how Palestinians had lost
their trust; how it had been systematically destroyed by the
occupation. He said that the first exercises the circus does
with children in the workshops are trust exercises. Circus
is based on trust and working together and it is necessary
for acrobats to trust one another in order to perform
together. He explained that anything built on trust stands
in stark contrast to the Israeli occupation. Shadi told us
how he intends to put trust back into Palestinians through
the circus. The circus has very grand aims; it also seeks to
build unity and solidarity in people who, in the face of the
current crisis, have become divided. Shadi explained how the
circus is not only about learning techniques; it also has a
wider pedagogical purpose.
Breaking down boundaries, domestically and abroad
Fresh in my mind when I went to meet Shadi was an incident
when a group of activists were held at Allenby Bridge
crossing into Israel by Israeli border control who were
suspicious of their purpose in traveling to the occupied
territory. Bored by 8 hours of waiting, the activists began
to entertain themselves by clowning around and juggling. The
border control soon realized that this group of people were
harmless and allowed their passage. Shadi spoke of how
Palestinians are internationally known as terrorists, he
seeks to promote circus as an alternative to violence and
rectify the reputation of Palestinians. But the circus has
come up against barriers domestically. When Shadi first told
people about his idea to set up a circus, they said, "So
what, you're going to put a girl wearing a bikini on a
trapeze?" The circus is a truly unfamiliar art in Palestine.
Despite this, the performances of the Palestinian Circus not
only sold out, but far outnumbered the capacity of the
venues they had booked, meaning the circus had to move to
larger and larger venues to meet overwhelming demand. The
circus maintained respect for Arabic traditions and culture;
there is nothing sexual in their performances, no performers
are scantily clad. When people witnessed the innocent, yet
ground-breaking nature of the circus, they came in droves
and brought their children.
A unique goal
Through the Palestinian circus, Shadi is spreading a
Brechtian message, his circus, he claims, is the first
circus group which has focused on human suffering. The
circus props include a makeshift separation wall, and the
aim of the circus is to illustrate the suffering of the
Palestinian people. Shadi said he wants to take the tour
around the world to highlight the problems encountered by
Palestinian people, but that it would be even better if
people from around the world came to the occupied territory,
to see for themselves. However, he does not always intend to
put on a circus based on suffering; he would like to do a
show unrelated to politics in the coming years and hopes
that this will represent the future and a marked change in
the Palestinian situation.
The first circus workshop in a Palestinian refugee
camp
We were lucky enough to witness the first ever circus
workshop in a Palestinian refugee camp, which took place in
one of the poorest refugee camps in the occupied
territories, Amari refugee camp, in Ramallah, in the
occupied Palestinian West Bank. A school in the camp filled
with wide-eyed, expectant children; and they would not be
disappointed. The show began with a clown, bringing an
element of the absurd to the children of the camp. I watched
as the amazed children's mouths gaped open for the entirety
of the show. The show began with the clown obstructing the
warm-up of the performers and soon turned to a kind of
deliberate chaos, with several intended mistakes, which
served to demonstrate that anyone can be involved in circus,
and slip-ups on the stage really do not matter. Through the
circus, a message of inclusivity and solidarity is spread to
the Palestinian people. Following the performance, the
performers held a workshop, in which they taught the
children to do acrobatics and juggle. The children were
divided by gender and I watched as the boys formed an
orderly queue, each excitedly awaiting their turn to roll
down a row of gym mats. The girls stood in a circle learning
to juggle with brightly-coloured juggling balls.
The future of the circus
Shadi intends to work with people with special needs in the
circus in the future. He has written a circus production
entitled, 'Dreamer Kid,' in which 50% of performers will be
people with disabilities. The story is about a kid who
wanted to join a circus group, but he jumped on a trapeze
and injured himself on his first day of practicing, then he
went to hospital and discovered that the hospital waiting
room was full of other injured circus performers. Shadi and
his lively group of performers will also be taking the
workshops to other refugee camps within the Palestinian
occupied West Bank. The Palestinian circus is an
all-encompassing, far-reaching group, led by a dynamic,
charismatic individual who has charged himself with reaching
out to the whole of the Palestinian people as well as
illustrating the Palestinian situation to the rest of the
world, and he is certainly on the way to achieving his goal!
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